Manager - Manager IRS Employee Review

4.0
Dec 29, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great work/life balance. Great training. Flexible work schedules. Low stress. The IRS is a great job if you stay in a union position.

Cons

If I had more information about being a manager with the IRS, I would have chosen a different path. The raises for managers are based on ratings. Managers are not in the union, so we can't dispute a rating. If your rating is low, so is your raise. We also don't get cost-of-living raises like the employees. I find that very unfair. The agency is a dinosaur and pays well below the market for a tax professional. A less-experienced person may not have experienced a pay cut, but an experienced person is likely to have suffered a drastic pay cut. As a manager, I am currently boxed in to my position and it's very difficult to transition to something else. It's almost a dead-end job. I am bored most of the time which is probably a good speed for most of the employees here. Sometimes the work is exciting, so I'm not miserable, but I'm also not motivated to come to work in the morning. My outside knowledge of taxation is not valued.

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5.0
Feb 26, 2026
Anonymous contractor
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Very good team environment to work.

Cons

None as good to work

3.0
May 26, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-Got me started in my career as an auditor -thorough tax law training -many senior auditors helping you learn the profession

Cons

-communication from management is not always transparent -when you are at the bottom of the ladder, you get verbal abuse from not only POA and taxpayers (understandable, given this is the IRS), but also management/OJI's. They want to look good to their bosses and will throw you under the bus if they have to in order to save themselves. Even if they gave you instructions that got you in trouble. They SHOULD be supporting you in your function as an auditor, but they'll do whatever is easiest for themselves ultimately. -on job training can be disorganized -bureaucratic culture -like many other companies, a lot of things you're expected to learn by yourself. Such as how to avoid POA delays.

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